YRC, union tentatively agree on wage cuts


NEW YORK (AP) — Teamsters leaders voted unanimously Wednesday for union workers at trucking company YRC Worldwide Inc. to take an immediate 10 percent pay cut to hold up the company’s dwindling finances.

At a meeting with YRC Worldwide Inc. and about 300 representatives of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters in Phoenix Tuesday, union leaders reviewed the deal and said they expect to send it out for a member vote on Tuesday. Ballots are expected to be counted on Dec. 30, Teamsters spokesman Bret Caldwell said.

The 40,000 union workers employed by YRC are currently covered under a five-year contract that began in March. This agreement is an amendment to help cope with current market conditions, Caldwell said. The Overland Park, Kan.-based company has a total of about 58,000 employees.

The cut will not include any changes in health care or other benefits, he said.

The amendment calls for “equal sacrifice,” Caldwell said, which means that all nonunion workers and executives on all rungs of the corporate ladder will take a similar cut in compensation. The spokesman noted that the nonunion cut may affect health coverage, and include provisions such as higher insurance co-payments.

“Every employee at YRC will help pay for this recovery,” he said.

The provision also cuts out executive bonuses, Caldwell said.

“[Management] cannot earn any money on the backs of our members taking a cut,” he said.

A trust has also been formed as part of the deal, which will provide workers warrants to buy stock when the company begins to turn around, Caldwell explained. Union workers will be offered warrants equal to about 15 percent of the company’s outstanding stock, or about 10 million shares, through the trust. The trust can sell the stock after January of 2010, Caldwell said.

The deal also includes “snapback” provision that will kill the agreement if the company files for bankruptcy or there is “a material change in ownership.”

Requests for comment from YRC Worldwide’s top executive, President and Chief Executive Bill Zollars, and a company spokeswoman, were not immediately returned.

In a statement last week, Zollars said that a deal “will establish a more competitive cost structure allowing us to accelerate our market share recovery and capitalize on opportunities for future growth, while at the same time, defending the long-term prospects and job security of our employees.”

The company has already made several moves to shore up its finances and pay down debt as its liquidity has come into question. It has swapped stock for notes, modified its nonunion pension and retirement plans, sold real estate, and started a $100 million tender offer to buy back outstanding notes. It has also announced plans to cut as much as 15 to 20 percent of its union work force as it merges its Yellow and Roadway unit operations.